[ppml] [address-policy-wg] Those pesky ULAs again
Anthony A. Crumb
Crumb_Anthony_A at cat.com
Mon Jun 4 07:08:31 EDT 2007
- Previous message: [ppml] Keeping the story straight
- Next message: [ppml] [address-policy-wg] Those pesky ULAs again
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
ppml-bounces at arin.net wrote on 05/29/2007 09:58:36 AM: > > > - IPv6 space is not infinite. It's a 64-72 bit address space. That's > > right, subnets with > 256 hosts are very uncommon today, so we've wasted > > 64 bits to number 256 things. That makes the space effectively on the > > long end 72 bits. > > according to <http://www.ipv6conference.com/conference.htm>, i gave a talk > entitled "DHCPv6 - The Case Against Stateless Autoconfig" at NAV6TF'2005. > > according to <http://www.isc.org/index.pl?/sw/dhcp/dhcp4_0.php>, there's > now code in "alpha test release" status to handle DHCPv6. > > imho, the days of EUI64 are numbered. at home i'll probably use a /120 for > each LAN. at work, we might splurge and use /96's. not that a /56 isn't > enough for my house or anything, i just want the sparseful wastitude of the > new address bits in IPV6 to all be at the top end. i'm using a /124 for my > T1, mostly to make the PTR's easy to write and read. I agree that requireing the use of 64 bits for interface identifiers is a monumental waste of address space. Is there a proposal of any type to change the requirement to use EUI64 interface identifiers with globally routable PI address space? > > > But more importantly, we have the T-Shirt from this exercise. > > Back in the 80's we gave out Class A's. It was the right thing > > to do. > > was it? DEC got 16.0.0.0/8 on the basis of having 130000 employees and > something like 10000 offices. they turned in five class B's to get the A. > does anybody here think that DEC needed a class A by ARIN's current > standards? this was a post-subnet, post-CIDR allocation. > > > I predict with the current allocation procedures IPv6 will be > > "used up" in my lifetime. I also predict the groups today getting > > /32's (and larger) will look like the legacy class A holders in > > 20 years time. When your doorknob automatically requests a ULA-C > > /64 when you bring it home, and your house has 2,000 of them as every > > individual system talks to each other we'll be looking at this quite > > differently. > > i include this only so that i can say, i nearly agree. unless we have an > IP architecture that splits EID/RID, those doorknobs will not be globally > reachable. (not that this is a problem for doorknobs but it might be for > microwave ovens or something.) > _______________________________________________ > This message sent to you through the ARIN Public Policy Mailing List > (PPML at arin.net). > Manage your mailing list subscription at: > http://lists.arin.net/mailman/listinfo/ppml -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.arin.net/pipermail/ppml/attachments/20070604/21b5d26c/attachment.html
- Previous message: [ppml] Keeping the story straight
- Next message: [ppml] [address-policy-wg] Those pesky ULAs again
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the PPML mailing list